The Iceni
Medical Moderator
Hi Alban,Alban once bubbled...
. . . one thing that has puzzled me though is how the whales blood gets supersaturated from a breath hold dive ?
Also would the whale slow down it's heart rate reducing prefusion to the tissues ?
1) The lungs are compressed to ambient pressure (resulting in mass transfer of blood into the pulmonary capilliary bed from the peripheral circulation) causing an increase in the partial pressure of all the gasses within them. Of course this moves into solution in the blood and tissues.
Although this does increase nitrogen loading, there is only one "lungful" of air from which this nitrogen can come. It is not continuously being topped up by gas at ambient pressure from a regulator. So, as I see it, a whale will will not continue to ongas at depth and they simply surface when they run out of oxygen (when the pp CO2 exceeds a set threshold). Because nitrogen loading is not great the risk of DCI is minimal.
Therefore a freediver will not get bent easily, if at all.
2) All diving mammals, including humans, exhibit the Herring Bruer (spelling?) reflex, which slows the heart rate on immersion.
I think that about covers it.
